Medical Schools in the United Kingdom (UK)
Medical Schools
A medical school, or faculty of medicine, is a
tertiary educational institution, or part of such an institution,
which is involved in the education of future medical practitioners
(medical doctors) as well as their accreditation to legally practice
medicine. Medical schools teach subjects such as human anatomy,
clinical practice, as well as many basic sciences.
The entry criteria, structure, teaching methodology and nature of
medical programs offered at medical schools vary considerably around
the world. Medical schools are often highly competitive, with medical
schools accepting only a few number of applicants based primarily on test
scores such as the MCAT or other standardized entrance examinations.
...
Medical students
A person accepted into a medical school and enrolled in an educational
program in medicine, with the goal of becoming a medical doctor, is
referred to as a medical student. Medical students are generally considered
to be at the earliest stage of the medical career pathway.
Medical students typically engage in both basic science and practical
clinical coursework during their tenure in medical school. Generally,
the first one to two years of training are devoted to the study of the
basic sciences as they pertain to healthcare, including molecular and
cellular biology, biochemistry, human anatomy, histology, physiology,
pharmacology, microbiology, and pathology. The remainder of a medical
student's training is typically devoted to gaining direct clinical
experience by participating in the care of patients in a hospital or
clinic setting.
Excerpt from "Medical school." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
27 Oct 2006, 20:42 UTC. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. 29 Oct 2006
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Medical_school&oldid=84115305 Medical Education in the United Kingdom (UK)
In the United Kingdom, medical school generally
refers to a department within a university which is involved in
the education of future medical practitioners. All leading British
medical schools are in the government sector and their core purpose
is to train doctors on behalf of the National Health Service.
Admissions
In the United Kingdom students generally commence their medical
studies without any preliminary higher education, typically at the
age of eighteen or nineteen. This contrasts with the U.S. system,
where a preliminary bachelor's degree is required for entry to medical
school. Entry to British medical schools is very competitive. Courses
last five or six years. The medical education itself takes five years,
consisting of an aggregate of 2 years of preclinical training in an
academic environment and three years of clinical training at a teaching
hospital; the way these two elements are integrated varies between
medical schools and is currently in a state of flux. Medical schools
and teaching hospitals are closely integrated. The overall course of
study is extended to six years if an intercalated degree is taken
[....]
After successful completion of clinical training a student graduates
as a Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery, usually abbreviated as 'MBChB'
(at the universities of Aberdeen, Birmingham, Bristol, Dundee, Edinburgh,
Glasgow, Leeds, Leicester, Liverpool, Keele, Manchester, Sheffield, and
Warwick). It is also abbreviated as 'MBBS' for the universities of UEA,
HYMS, London, and Newcastle; 'MBBCh' for Cardiff and Swansea; 'BMBCh'
for Oxford, 'BMBS' for University of Nottingham, Peninsular Medical
School and Brighton-Sussex, 'BM' for Southampton, and 'MBBChir' for
Cambridge. Queen's University of Belfast gives the degree of 'MBBChBAO'
(BAO is Bachelor of Obstetrics). The Bute Medical School (University of
St Andrews) offers a pre-clinical BSc or BSc(Hons) with subsequent entry
to Manchester or Keele for Clinical Teaching, and a Manchester MBChB (it
is sometimes possible for entrants to negotiate transfer to another
medical school for clinical training, such as Glasgow or Dundee).
Applications for entry into medical school (in common with other university
courses) are made through the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service.
UCAS generally allows students to apply for up to six places at different
universities, however applicants for medical school may use only four of
these places for medical courses, the remaining two must be left blank or
be used to apply for non-medical courses, with many students applying for
courses in biomedical science, medical genetics etc. as insurance options.
Many UK medical schools now also require applicants to sit additional
entrance tests such as the UKCAT which is a computerised test taken in
special test centres. More information can be found about UKCAT at UKCAT
Other primary medical qualifications registrable with the General Medical
Council exist in the UK, some of which have only recently become defunct,
and many people in the UK still practising medicine have these qualifications.
These include the 'LMSSA' (the licentiate in Medicine and Surgery of the
Society of Apothecaries), the 'LRCP, MRCS' (conjoint diploma of the London
Royal Colleges) and the 'LRCPE, LRCSE, LRCPSG' (the 'Scottish Triple Diploma',
given by the Royal Colleges in Glasgow and Edinburgh).
Course structure
Traditionally the delivery of medical education has been divided into two
distinct styles. Problem-based learning (PBL) aims to develop a mature and
self-sufficient style of learning by encouraging students to work in groups
on solving clinical scenarios with little factual input from tutors in the
form of lectures. Some people have criticised PBL courses (whether rightly
or wrongly) for providing too little support for students, the lack of
interaction between teacher and student meaning problems (academic or
pastoral) can go unnoticed for a long time [1], however, others suggest
that PBL courses offer greater support as problems can be picked up earlier
on as the tutor listens to what the student has understood in tutorials,
as opposed to lecture-based courses where the lecturer may only listen to
what the student has understood during examinations, by which time it is
too late to rectify the situation. The balance of truth in each of these
viewpoints depends in part on the quality of the individual course. It is
worth bearing in mind there is, in fact, a lot of variation in the way that
both PBL and lecture-based teaching methods are applied at different
institutions. Traditional courses are classically lecture-intensive with a
much more time devoted to didactic teaching. These courses have been
criticised for "spoon-feeding" students and failing to develop in their
graduates the ability to cope in the real world.
Most people agree though for a need for balance. This is quite hard to
achieve with financial and time constraints for all involved.
Another division of medical curricula is on the basis of whether they
belong to the traditional pre-clinical/clinical type, where theoretical
teaching (pre-clinical, i.e. microbiology, physiology etc.) is delivered
completely separately from the clinical teaching (i.e. communication,
diagnosis), or whether they conform to an integrated model, where patient
interaction begins much earlier and emphasis is placed on relating the
learned physiology to clinical scenarios from the very beginning.
Excerpt from "Medical school (United Kingdom)." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
21 Oct 2006, 05:52 UTC. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. 29 Oct 2006
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Medical_school_%28United_Kingdom%29&oldid=82768479 United Kingdom (UK)
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
(usually shortened to the United Kingdom, the UK, or Britain) is a
country and sovereign state that is situated in west Northern Europe.
Its territory and population are primarily situated on the island of
Great Britain and in Northern Ireland on the island of Ireland, with
additional settlements on numerous smaller islands in the surrounding
seas. The United Kingdom is bounded by the Atlantic Ocean, and its
ancillary bodies of water, including the North Sea, the English Channel,
the Celtic Sea, and the Irish Sea. The mainland is linked to France by
the Channel Tunnel and Northern Ireland shares a land border with the
Republic of Ireland.
The United Kingdom is a political union made up of four constituent
countries: England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. The United
Kingdom also has several overseas territories, including Bermuda,
Gibraltar, Montserrat and Saint Helena among others. The dependencies
of the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands, while possessions of the
Crown and part of the British Isles, are not part of the United Kingdom.
A constitutional monarchy, the United Kingdom is a Commonwealth Realm,
sharing the same person — Queen Elizabeth II — with the fifteen other
Realms as monarch and head of state.
Excerpt of "United Kingdom." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
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